Constructing Test Items (Guidelines & 7 Common Item Types) — Caveon (2024)

Posted by Erika Johnson

updated over a week ago

Introduction

You have been given the task of building an examination for your organization. After spending two weeks panicking about how you would do this and procrastinating the work that must be done, you are finally ready to begin the test development process. But where in the world do you begin? Why do you need to create this exam? You know you need to construct test items, but which item types are the best fit for your exam? Who is your audience? How do you determine that?

Luckily for you, Caveon has an amazing team of experts on hand in our Caveon Secure Exam Development (C-SEDs) department to help. But if you want to try your hand at test development on your own, here’s some information on best practices to guide you on your way.

Table of Contents

  1. Determining Your Purpose for Testing
    1. The Benefits of Identifying Your Exam’s Purpose
    2. What Is a Minimally Qualified Candidate (MQC)?
  2. Factors to Consider when Constructing Your Test
    1. Common Exam Types
    2. Common Item Types
  3. General Guidelines for Constructing Test Items

Determining Your Purpose for Testing: Why and Who

First thing’s first. Before creating your test, you need to: 1) determine why you are testing your candidates, and 2) figure out who exactly will be taking your exam. Assessing the purpose of your exam is the first vital step of the development process. You do not want to test just to test; you want to scope out the “why” of your exam: why this exam is important to your organization, and what you are trying to achieve with having your test takers sit for it. You can narrow down your purpose for testing by asking yourself a few questions:

  • Is your organization interested in testing to see what was learned at the end of a course presented to students?
  • Are you looking to assess if an applicant for a job has the necessary knowledge to perform the role?
  • Are candidates trying to obtain certification within a certain field?

The Benefits of Identifying Your Exam's Purpose

Learning the purpose of your exam will help you come up with a plan on how best to set up your exam—which exam type to use, which type of exam items will best measure the skills of your candidates (we will discuss this in a minute), etc. Determining this purpose will also help you to be better able to figure out your test audience. Whether they are students still in school, individuals looking to qualify for a position, or experts looking to get certification in a certain product or field—it’s important to make sure your exam is actually testing at the appropriate level. Your exam will not be valid if your items are too easy or too hard, so keeping the minimally qualified candidate (MQC) in mind during all of the steps of the exam development process will ensure you are capturing valid test results overall.

What Is the MQC?

MQC is the acronym for “minimally qualified candidate.” The MQC is a conceptualization of the assessment candidate who possesses the minimum knowledge, skills, experience, and competence to just meet the expectations of a credentialed individual. If the credential is entry level, the expectations of the MQC will be less than if the credential is designated at an intermediate or expert level. Think of an ability continuum that goes from low ability to high ability. Somewhere along that ability continuum, a cut point will be set. Those candidates who score below that cut point are not qualified and will fail the test. Those candidates who score above that cut point are qualified and will pass. The minimally qualified candidate, though, should just barely make the cut. It’s important to focus on the word “qualified,” because even though this candidate will likely gain more expertise over time, they are still deemed to have the requisite knowledge and abilities to perform the job.

Factors to Consider when Constructing Your Test

You’ve determined the purpose of your exam and identified the audience. Now it’s time to decide on the exam type and which item types to use that will be most appropriate to measure the skills of your test takers. The type of exam you choose depends on what you are trying to test and the kind of tool you are using to deliver your exam (note that you should always make sure the software you use to develop and deliver your exam is thoroughly vetted—here are some things to look for). The type of items you choose depends on your measurement goals and what you are trying to assess. It is essential to take all of this into consideration before moving forward with development. Let’s take a look at some common exam types for you to consider.

Common Exam Types

Fixed-Form Exam

Fixed-form delivery is a method of testing where every test taker receives the same items. An organization can have more than one fixed-item form in rotation, using the same items that are randomized on each live form. Additionally, forms can be made using a larger item bank and published with a fixed set of items equated to a comparable difficulty and content area match.

Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT)

A CAT exam is a test that adapts to the candidate's ability in real time by selecting different questions from the bank in order to provide a more accurate measurement of their ability level on a common scale. Every time a test taker answers an item, the computer re-estimates the tester’s ability based on all the previous answers and the difficulty of those items. The computer then selects the next item that the test taker should have a 50% chance of answering correctly.

Linear on the Fly Testing (LOFT)

A LOFT exam is a test where the items are drawn from an item bank pool and presented on the exam in a way that each person sees a different set of items. The difficulty of the overall test is controlled to be equal for all examinees. LOFT exams utilize automated item generation (AIG) to create large item banks.

The above three exam types can be used with any standard item type. Before moving on, however, there is another more innovative exam type to consider if your delivery method allows for it:

Performance-Based Testing

A performance-based assessment measures the test taker's ability to apply the skills and knowledge learned beyond typical methods of study and/or learned through research and experience. For example, a test taker in a medical field may be asked to draw blood from a patient to show they can competently perform the task. Or a test taker wanting to become a chef may be asked to prepare a specific dish to ensure they can execute it properly.

Common Item Types

There are many different item types to choose from. (Check out a few of our favorites in this article.) While utilizing more item types on your exam won’t ensure you have more valid test results (as discussed here), it’s important to know what’s available in order to decide on the best item format for your program. Here are a few of the most common items to consider when constructing your test:

Multiple-Choice

A multiple-choice item is a question where a candidate is asked to select the correct response from a choice of four (or more) options.

Multiple Response

A multiple response item is an item where a candidate is asked to select more than one response from a select pool of options (i.e., “choose two,” “choose 3,” etc.)

Short Answer

Short answer items ask a test taker to synthesize, analyze, and evaluate information, and then to present it coherently in written form.

Matching

A matching item requires test takers to connect a definition/description/scenario to its associated correct keyword or response.

Build List

A build list item challenges a candidate’s ability to identify and order the steps/tasks needed to perform a process or procedure.

Discrete Option Multiple Choice (DOMC)

DOMC™ is known as the “multiple-choice item makeover.” Instead of showing all the answer options, DOMC options are randomly presented one at a time. For each option, the test taker chooses “yes” or “no.” When the question is answered correctly or incorrectly, the next question is presented. DOMC has been used by award-winning testing programs to prevent cheating and test theft. You can learn more about the DOMC item type in this white paper.

SmartItem

A self-protecting item, otherwise known as a SmartItem, employs a proprietary technology resistant to cheating and theft. A SmartItem contains multiple variations, all of which work together to cover an entire learning objective completely. Each time the item is administered, the computer generates a random variation. SmartItem technology has numerous benefits, including curbing item development costs and mitigating the effects of testwiseness. You can learn more about the SmartItem in this infographic and this white paper.

What Are the General Guidelines for Constructing Test Items?

Regardless of the exam type and items types you choose, focusing on some best practice guidelines can set up your exam for success in the long run. There are many guidelines for creating tests (see this handy guide, for example), but this list sticks to the most important points. Little things can really make a difference when developing a valid and reliable exam, so be sure to follow along!

Institute Fairness

Although you want to ensure that your items are difficult enough that not everyone gets them correct, you never want to trick your test takers! Keeping your wording clear and making sure your questions are direct and not ambiguous is very important. For example, asking a question such as “What is the most important ingredient to include when baking chocolate chip cookies?” does not set your test taker up for success. One person may argue that sugar is the most important, while another test taker may say that the chocolate chips are the most necessary ingredient. A better way to ask this question would be “What is an ingredient found in chocolate chip cookies?” or “Place the following steps in the proper order when baking chocolate chip cookies.”

Stick to the Topic at Hand

When creating your items, ensuring that each item aligns with the objective being tested is very important. If the objective asks the test taker to identify genres of music from the 1990s, and your item is asking the test taker to identify different wind instruments, your item is not aligning with the objective.

Ensure Item Relevancy

Your items should be relevant to the task that you are trying to test. Coming up with ideas to write on can be difficult, but avoid asking your test takers to identify trivial facts about your objective just to find something to write about. If your objective asks the test taker to know the main female characters in the popular TV show Friends, asking the test taker what color Rachel’s skirt was in episode 3 is not an essential fact that anyone would need to recall to fully understand the objective.

Gauge Item Difficulty

As discussed above, remembering your audience when writing your test items can make or break your exam. To put it into perspective, if you are writing a math exam for a fourth-grade class, but you write all of your items on advanced trigonometry, you have clearly not met the difficulty level for the test taker.

Inspect Your Options

When writing your options, keep these points in mind:

    • Always make sure your correct option is 100% correct, and your incorrect options are 100% incorrect. By using partially correct or partially incorrect options, you will confuse your candidate. Doing this could keep a truly qualified candidate from answering the item correctly.
    • Make sure your distractors are plausible. If your correct response logically answers the question being asked, but your distractors are made up or even silly, it will be very easy for any test taker to figure out which option is correct. Thus, your exam will not properly discriminate between qualified and unqualified candidates.
    • Try to make your options parallel to one another. Ensuring that your options are all worded similarly and are approximately the same length will keep one from standing out from another, helping to remove that testwiseness effect.

Conclusion

Constructing test items—and creating entire examinations—is no easy undertaking. This article helps you identify your specific purpose for testing and helps you determine the most common exam and item types you can use to measure the skills of your test takers. We’ve gone over general best practices to consider when constructing items, and we’ve sprinkled helpful resources throughout to help you on your exam development journey.

This article helps you tackle the first step of the 8-step assessment process: planning & developing test specifications. To learn more about creating your exam, including how to increase the usable lifespan of your exam, review our ultimate guide on secure exam creation and our workbook on evaluating your testing engine, leveraging secure item types, and increasing the number of items on your tests. And as always, if you need help constructing your test or items, reach out to our incredible C-SEDs team—it's what they do!

Erika Johnson

Erika is an Exam Development Manager in Caveon’s C-SEDs group. With almost 20 years in the testing industry, nine of which have been with Caveon, Erika is a veteran of both exam development and test security. Erika has extensive experience working with new, innovative test designs, and she knows how to best keep an exam secure and valid.

View all articles

About Caveon

For more than 18 years, Caveon Test Security has driven the discussion and practice of exam security in the testing industry. Today, as the recognized leader in the field, we have expanded our offerings to encompass innovative solutions and technologies that provide comprehensive protection: Solutions designed to detect, deter, and even prevent test fraud.

Topics from this blog:Exam DevelopmentK-12 EducationTest Security BasicsDOMC™CertificationHigher EducationOnline ExamsAutomated Item Generation (AIG)SmartItem™Medical Licensure

Constructing Test Items (Guidelines & 7 Common Item Types) — Caveon (2024)

FAQs

What are the general guidelines for constructing test items? ›

Start questions with words such as “compare,” “contrast,” “explain why.” Don't use “what,” “when,” or “list.” (These latter types are better measured with objective-type items). Write items that define the parameters of expected answers as clearly as possible.

What are the different types of items in testing? ›

There are two general categories of test items: (1) objective items which require students to select the correct response from several alternatives or to supply a word or short phrase to answer a question or complete a statement; and (2) subjective or essay items which permit the student to organize and present an ...

What are the top 4 steps for constructing a test? ›

The Test Construction Process

Writing items for the test. Preliminary administration of the test. Checking the reliability of the final test. Checking the validity of the final test.

What are the guidelines for test plan? ›

This includes defining test objectives, test approach, test tools, test environment, test schedules and team responsibilities and composition. However, before the right test approach and other planning details can be defined, a larger view of the organizational and project objectives must be defined first.

What are the 5 types of test items? ›

Five test item types are discussed: multiple choice, true-false, matching, completion, and essay.

What are the 5 types of material testing? ›

Materials testing breaks down into five major categories: mechanical testing; testing for thermal properties; testing for electrical properties; testing for resistance to corrosion, radiation, and biological deterioration; and nondestructive testing.

What are the 5 testing methods? ›

There are many different types of testing, but for this article we will stick to the core five components of testing:
  • 1) Unit Tests. ...
  • 2) Integration/System Tests. ...
  • 3) Functional Tests. ...
  • 4) Regression Tests. ...
  • 5) Acceptance Tests.
Jun 6, 2017

What are the four major types of test? ›

There are various types of tests in education, from subjective, objective, summative, and formative to diagnostic tests.

What are test steps in testing? ›

What Are the Phases of Testing?
  • Requirement Analysis.
  • Test Planning.
  • Test Case Designing and Development.
  • Test Environment Setup.
  • Test Execution.
  • Test Closure.

What are the 3 things that make a good test? ›

A good assessment should be reliable, valid, and free of bias. First, reliability refers to the consistency of students' scores; that is, an assessment is reliable when it produces stable and consistent results. Reliability can come in two major forms: (1) stability and (2) alternate form reliability.

What are test items in test plan example? ›

4) Test Items

Test Items are general functionality to be tested – for example, installation, registration, checkout, etc. In a way, it is a short description of the content of the Test Plan. Later on, each of the items will be explained in detail.

What items should a good test contain? ›

  • What Are the Qualities of Good Assessment? Reliability or Consistency. How to Make Sure Your Test Is Reliable? Validity. Objectivity. Comprehensiveness. Absence of Ambiguity. Preparation.
  • Appropriateness of Time.
Dec 15, 2021

What are the basic principles of testing? ›

The seven principles of testing
  • Testing shows the presence of defects, not their absence. ...
  • Exhaustive testing is impossible. ...
  • Early testing saves time and money. ...
  • Defects cluster together. ...
  • Beware of the pesticide paradox. ...
  • Testing is context dependent. ...
  • Absence-of-errors is a fallacy.

How do you create a simple test plan? ›

How to write a test plan
  1. Research and analyze the software. Before you create a test plan, consider studying the software and researching the type of people who are most likely to use it. ...
  2. Design a test strategy. ...
  3. Explain the objectives. ...
  4. Outline test criteria. ...
  5. Plan a test environment. ...
  6. Create a schedule. ...
  7. Identify deliverables.
Feb 3, 2023

How do you write a test strategy? ›

The key components of a good test strategy document are as follows:
  1. Test objectives and their scope.
  2. Key business-led quality requirements.
  3. Possible risk factors.
  4. Test deliverables.
  5. Testing tools.
  6. Responsibilities.
  7. Tracking and reporting of issues.
  8. Configuration and change management.
Jul 13, 2022

What are the 6 types of tests? ›

Six types of assessments are:
  • Diagnostic assessments.
  • Formative assessments.
  • Summative assessments.
  • Ipsative assessments.
  • Norm-referenced assessments.
  • Criterion-referenced assessments.
Sep 24, 2021

What are the four 4 basic testing methods? ›

There are generally four recognized levels of testing: unit/component testing, integration testing, system testing, and acceptance testing.

What is test checklist? ›

Checklist - is a list of tests which should be run in a definite procedure. It helps to understand if testing is fully run and how many failed. It also helps formalize testing separetely taken functionality, putting tests in a list. Test order in the checklist may be strict as well as random.

What are the seven kinds of materials testing? ›

Materials Testing
  • Tensile Test to Tensile Test.
  • Compression test. and compression testing machines. ...
  • Flexure test to Flexure test.
  • Fatigue test. ...
  • Fracture mechanics. ...
  • Hardness testing and hardness testing methods to Hardness testing and hardness testing methods.
  • Impact test to Impact test.
  • Drop weight test to Drop weight test.

How many types of testing are there in QA? ›

There are two types of QA testing: manual testing and automated testing.

What are the 7 principles of testing? ›

According to the ISTQB (International Software Testing Qualifications Board), the seven principles of software testing are:
  • Testing shows the presence of defects.
  • Exhaustive testing is impossible.
  • Early testing.
  • Defect clustering.
  • Pesticide paradox.
  • Testing is context dependent.
  • Absence-of-errors fallacy.
Jun 16, 2022

What is 5 point testing? ›

Five Point Test (5TT) is a neuropsychological test that assesses figural fluency. A participant is asked to generate as many unique designs as possible in a certain time limit. The aim of this study was to create Czech population norms for the Five Point Test.

How to create a test? ›

Creating Exams
  1. Choose appropriate item types for your objectives. ...
  2. Highlight how the exam aligns with course objectives. ...
  3. Write instructions that are clear, explicit, and unambiguous. ...
  4. Write instructions that preview the exam. ...
  5. Word questions clearly and simply. ...
  6. Enlist a colleague or TA to read through your exam.

What is common test framework? ›

The Common Test framework is a tool that supports implementation and automated execution of test cases to any types of target systems. Common Test is the main tool being used in all testing- and verification activities that are part of Erlang/OTP system development and maintenance.

What is the most common type of test? ›

Common Test Types. There are three common test types: written tests, oral tests, and physical skills tests.

What is the most common type of test in testing? ›

Regression Testing is one of the most common forms of testing and involves re-execution of previous test cases. It repeats all previous functional and non-functional tests to ensure that the system continues to perform satisfactorily even after changes, updates, or modifications.

Which of the following are guidelines in constructing matching type test? ›

Matching questions
  • Provide clear directions.
  • Keep the information in each column as hom*ogeneous as possible.
  • Allow the responses to be used more than once.
  • Arrange the list of responses systematically if possible (chronological, alphabetical, numerical)

What should a teacher do before constructing items for a particular test? ›

What should he do before constructing the items? Review the previous lessons. Determine the length of time for answering it. Announce to the students the scope of the test.

What are the different guidelines in constructing multiple-choice type of test? ›

  • 14 RULES FOR WRITING MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS.
  • Use Plausible Distractors (wrong-response options) ...
  • Use a Question Format. ...
  • Emphasize Higher-Level Thinking. ...
  • Emphasize Higher-Level Thinking (continued) ...
  • Keep Option Lengths Similar. ...
  • Balance the Placement of the Correct Answer. ...
  • Be Grammatically Correct.

What is one guideline in developing a multiple-choice item of a test? ›

Avoid complex multiple choice items, in which some or all of the alternatives consist of different combinations of options. As with “all of the above” answers, a sophisticated test-taker can use partial knowledge to achieve a correct answer. 2. Keep the specific content of items independent of one another.

What kind of materials should be included in a matching type test? ›

The matching type test item format provides a way for learners to connect a word, sentence or phrase in one column to a corresponding word, sentence or phrase in a second column. The items in the first column are called premises and the answers in the second column are the responses.

What are the basic steps in constructing teacher made test? ›

General Steps in the Preparation of Teacher-made test
  1. Prepare a table of specification.
  2. Define clearly the instructional objectives of the course. ...
  3. Analysis of the relative importance of these objectives.
  4. Construct the test. - The purpose of the test. ...

What do you do first to prepare for a test? ›

Exam preparation: Ten study tips
  1. Give yourself enough time to study. via GIPHY. ...
  2. Organize your study space. via GIPHY. ...
  3. Use flow charts and diagrams. via GIPHY. ...
  4. Practice on old exams. via GIPHY. ...
  5. Explain your answers to others. via GIPHY. ...
  6. Organize study groups with friends. via GIPHY. ...
  7. Take regular breaks. via GIPHY. ...
  8. Snack on brain food.

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